France’s trove of DNA profiles has helped solve high-profile crimes and was used to find some of the Louvre suspects, and it is growing. The police can also access other countries’ databases.
Regina Leader Post on MSN
A textbook, a blade, DNA and lack thereof: What forensics say about Misha Pavelick's death
Dr. Dino Grammatico conducted an autopsy on Pavelick’s body following the fatal incident. The pathologist explained to jurors ...
Over the past eleven days, 195 bodies have been returned to Gaza by Israeli authorities, in exchange for the bodies of 13 ...
Genealogists use open-source data to build the family tree to find the most recent common ancestors and identify a suspect.
1don MSNOpinion
Opinion: We’re fighting the war on crime the wrong way
America says it wants to be tough on crime. But instead of solving murders, we’re funding deportations. Instead of clearing ...
The Wake County Sheriff’s Office has identified a woman killed in a 1968 homicide using partner agencies and advancements in forensic genealogy.
Apparently, when someone has a pacemaker, there's a battery too, and they don't bother taking it out/off. They simply snip ...
Matt Smith gives a standout performance in Sky Atlantic’s anticipated adaptation of Nick Cave’s novel The Death of Bunny ...
In July 2000, a woman was sexually assaulted and beaten inside a hotel change room in Belleville, Ont. Nearly 25 years later, DNA evidence found on a cigarette butt helped police identify the man ...
Apparently, when someone has a pacemaker, there's a battery too, and they don't bother taking it out/off. They simply snip ...
Nine people died because nearly three tons of unstable explosives were wrongly stored in an open police station area. A ...
Here are the shows that American viewers have been returning to time and again for comfort -- the 15 longest-running ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results